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Kali is the Divine Feminine in her fierce form. She is the destroyer of evil and wears around her neck a garland of skulls of the demons she has slain. She stands upon her sleeping consort Shiva , to represent the active creative energy (Shakti)that arises when consciousness is inactive (Shiva). The both of them are surrounded by hibiscus flowers, which are said to be the flower of Kali. Beneath her a banner reads, "Our Lady of Calcutta", as Calcutta is the central location for Kali Worship in India.

Kali is the Divine Feminine in her fierce form. She is the destroyer of evil and wears around her neck a garland of skulls of the demons she has slain. She stands upon her sleeping consort Shiva , to represent the active creative energy (Shakti)that arises when consciousness is inactive (Shiva). The both of them are surrounded by hibiscus flowers, which are said to be the flower of Kali. Beneath her a banner reads, "Our Lady of Calcutta", as Calcutta is the central location for Kali Worship in India.

Kali is the Divine Feminine in her fierce form. She is the destroyer of evil and wears around her neck a garland of skulls of the demons she has slain. She stands upon her sleeping consort Shiva , to represent the active creative energy (Shakti)that arises when consciousness is inactive (Shiva). The both of them are surrounded by hibiscus flowers, which are said to be the flower of Kali. Beneath her a banner reads, "Our Lady of Calcutta", as Calcutta is the central location for Kali Worship in India.

Kali is the Divine Feminine in her fierce form. She is the destroyer of evil and wears around her neck a garland of skulls of the demons she has slain. She stands upon her sleeping consort Shiva , to represent the active creative energy (Shakti)that arises when consciousness is inactive (Shiva). The both of them are surrounded by hibiscus flowers, which are said to be the flower of Kali. Beneath her a banner reads, "Our Lady of Calcutta", as Calcutta is the central location for Kali Worship in India.